4.8 • 689 Ratings
🗓️ 30 January 2020
⏱️ 22 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
The best way to fund open source projects remains a question, and one that - in the context of crypto protocols - has never had higher stakes. Over the last few weeks, we’ve seen live action experiments in a number of different approaches.
Gitcoin grants used a quadratic funding program to match grants to technology builders and media creators in Ethereum
After months and months of concerted community debate and conversation, Zcash will implement a new Dev Fund of 20% of the block rewards after the Founders Reward runs out in November, splitting it between the Electric Coin Co (7%), Zcash Foundation (5%) and 3rd party developers (8%)
A consortium (cartel?) of the 4 largest BCH mining pools tried to insist upon a 12.5% block reward diversion to a new dev fund, with a threat to orphan blocks that didn’t comply. The plan ran into a barrier when Roger Ver’s bitcoin.com backed away.
Also in this episode, @nlw looks at the latest in CBDCs - including Japan’s continued hedging that they’re preparing for the possibility of needing to move quickly and Cambodia’s announcement that they will be implementing a CBDC this quarter.
Finally, Andrew Yang took a few minutes yesterday to talk about cryptocurrencies and why regulation with the intent to stop them would be doomed to fail.
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0:00.0 | Welcome back to The Breakdown, an everyday analysis breaking down the most important stories in Bitcoin, crypto, and beyond, with your host, NLW. |
0:15.0 | The Breakdown is distributed by CoinDesk. |
0:20.2 | Welcome back to the breakdown. |
0:22.5 | It is Thursday, January 30th, and today we are going to be talking first about public |
0:28.8 | funding in protocols and blockchains. |
0:32.0 | We're going to recap a couple stories from last week and look at a new vote from Zcash |
0:36.7 | on the future of their dev reward. |
0:39.0 | Second, we're going to check in on the wild world of central bank digital currencies, |
0:44.6 | CBDCs. Japan is in the news around comments about a future possible digital yen. China was in |
0:51.2 | the discussion today on the back of a report from last October that was resurfaced by |
0:55.5 | Baidu, and Cambodia has announced that they are in late stage trials for their own CBDC project. |
1:03.4 | Finally, we're going to wrap with a conversation with Democratic Dark Horse Andrew Yang, |
1:09.0 | a contender for the Democratic nomination for president, |
1:13.3 | who sat down this week in Iowa with Joe Wisenthal from Bloomberg to talk, among other things, |
1:19.5 | cryptocurrency. |
1:20.9 | Andrew Yang is obviously probably the favorite politician of the crypto crowd, so we're going to |
1:25.9 | see what he had to say. |
1:29.6 | But first, let's dive in around public funding. Last week, we had two separate stories around different approaches to |
1:37.7 | public funding issues with blockchains. And basically at core, and what we're talking about with |
1:42.5 | public funding is that blockchains aren't organized as traditional for-profit companies, where those companies have revenue lines and they spend some of that revenue on marketing and some of it on R&D and some of it on development. |
1:53.7 | They are effectively these open source networks that have lots of contributors from different places, different companies, different backgrounds, |
2:01.3 | different economic situations, all working together for the good of the whole. Now, of course, |
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